A dark chapter in Canadian history

CBC Television News: The National, 18 March 1998

Guest: ERIC SORENSEN, CBC Reporter
GINA BAYHA, Granddaughter Of Miner
UNIDENTIFIED Deline Band Council Member
JANE STEWART, Minister Of Indian And Northern Affairs
ROBERT BOTHWELL, Historian

PETER MANSBRIDGE: Some new light tonight on a dark chapter in Canadian
history. It goes back to the 1930s, when native people were recruited
to work in a uranium mine. They were never told of the health hazards they
faced, even though the government knew. Most of the workers came from
the Dene village of Deline, just south of the Arctic Circle on the shores
of Great Bear Lake. And that's where the CBCs Eric Sorensen reports from
tonight.

ERIC SORENSEN: An abandoned head frame is about all that's visible of
the toxic uranium once mined here to produce the world's first atom bombs.
Three-hundred kilometres away, Deline -- formerly Fort Franklin -- is
where young aboriginal men were recruited to do some of the dirtiest work at
the mine. Paul Baton, now 83, used to lift sacks of uranium ore onto boats.

SORENSEN: No protection?

SORENSEN: "We usually dressed like this" he says, "it's like flour. It
just starts covering what you're wearing."

(Archival Film Clip): They mine the pitchblende ore that yields both
uranium and radium.

SORENSEN: The Eldorado mine was opened and run by Ottawa in the 1930s.
It supplied the raw materials used to make the atomic bombs that fell on
Japan a decade later. About 20 years after that, says Baton, people began
dying prematurely of cancer.

UNIDENTIFIED: They're all gone.

SORENSEN: Gina Bayha's grandfather worked at the mine and died of
cancer.

GINA BAYHA / GRANDDAUGHTER OF MINER: They trusted, in good faith, that
there's nothing to worry about.

SORENSEN: People here in Deline say what's most frustrating is that
after so many years and so much illness, they still don't think they're
getting straight answers from the Canadian government about the hazards people
faced working in and around the mine. Documents obtained by CBC suggest
Ottawa knew as early as 1932 that precautions should be taken in
handling radioactive materials. The Department Of Mines Annual Report states:
"the ingestion of small amounts of radioactive dust or emanation over a long
period...eventually may have serious consequences... (including) lung
cancer, bone necrosis and rapid anemia." That vital health information
wasn't shared with uranium workers, has shaken members of the Deline
Band Council.
UNIDENTIFIED DELINE BAND COUNCIL MEMBER: We felt that Canadian
government is hiding something from us.

SORENSEN: The federal minister responsible for northern affairs says
it's all new information to her.

JANE STEWART / MINISTER OF INDIAN AND NORTHERN AFFAIRS: It would will
be appropriate for the federal government to take a look at this
information and determine what in fact was available and the approaches that have
been taken and need to be taken.

SORENSEN: This historian says at the time, governments had other
priorities than the health of a few natives in northern Canada.

ROBERT BOTHWELL / HISTORIAN: I would explain the federal governments
failure by their concentration on anti-communism and defence. That's,
you know, it's a hazard, but the Russians are a worse hazard.

SORENSEN: The Deline Band Council says the entire community will be
consulted on what to do next -- though Paul Baton says it's about time
Ottawa did something to address a health problem it knew about such a
long time ago. Eric Sorensen, CBC News, Deline, N.W.T.